‘The New Order of Things’: Immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls

In this paper, I discuss two 1835 ordinances passed by the local council of the British colony of Mauritius. Passed shortly after Britain’s 1833 Slavery Abolition Act, these restrictions initiated the regulation and restriction of immigration within the British Empire. Seen as quite novel in their d...

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Main Author: Nandita Sharma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women 2017-09-01
Series:Anti-Trafficking Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/262
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spelling doaj-216f3a75a6964019bb8d44cb4a2be7052020-11-25T00:02:03ZengGlobal Alliance Against Traffic in WomenAnti-Trafficking Review2286-75112287-01132017-09-01910.14197/atr.20121793262‘The New Order of Things’: Immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controlsNandita SharmaIn this paper, I discuss two 1835 ordinances passed by the local council of the British colony of Mauritius. Passed shortly after Britain’s 1833 Slavery Abolition Act, these restrictions initiated the regulation and restriction of immigration within the British Empire. Seen as quite novel in their day, these ordinances employed the rhetoric of ‘protecting emigrants’ to legitimise the new constraints they imposed on free human mobility. Today, when the national ‘logic of constraint’ on human mobility is almost uncontested, the idea that immigration controls protect migrants remains central to the discursive practices concerning human trafficking. Nation-state constraints on human mobility are normalised while the exploitation and abuse of people on the move is ideologically redirected to ‘modern-day slavers’ or ‘evil traffickers’, thus absolving both the state and globally operative capital of their culpability.http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/262coolieismslave labour relationshuman mobilityimmigration controls
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nandita Sharma
spellingShingle Nandita Sharma
‘The New Order of Things’: Immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls
Anti-Trafficking Review
coolieism
slave labour relations
human mobility
immigration controls
author_facet Nandita Sharma
author_sort Nandita Sharma
title ‘The New Order of Things’: Immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls
title_short ‘The New Order of Things’: Immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls
title_full ‘The New Order of Things’: Immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls
title_fullStr ‘The New Order of Things’: Immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls
title_full_unstemmed ‘The New Order of Things’: Immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls
title_sort ‘the new order of things’: immobility as protection in the regime of immigration controls
publisher Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women
series Anti-Trafficking Review
issn 2286-7511
2287-0113
publishDate 2017-09-01
description In this paper, I discuss two 1835 ordinances passed by the local council of the British colony of Mauritius. Passed shortly after Britain’s 1833 Slavery Abolition Act, these restrictions initiated the regulation and restriction of immigration within the British Empire. Seen as quite novel in their day, these ordinances employed the rhetoric of ‘protecting emigrants’ to legitimise the new constraints they imposed on free human mobility. Today, when the national ‘logic of constraint’ on human mobility is almost uncontested, the idea that immigration controls protect migrants remains central to the discursive practices concerning human trafficking. Nation-state constraints on human mobility are normalised while the exploitation and abuse of people on the move is ideologically redirected to ‘modern-day slavers’ or ‘evil traffickers’, thus absolving both the state and globally operative capital of their culpability.
topic coolieism
slave labour relations
human mobility
immigration controls
url http://www.antitraffickingreview.org/index.php/atrjournal/article/view/262
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